Category: News

Make your own Dr. Who comic

drwhocomic-7572320Via Lisa at Sequentially Speaking, the BBC has launched an interactive Comic Maker section of its ever-growing Dr. Who website.  If you’re not from England, however, don’t bother clicking here, because rights restrictions will prevent you from using the site’s Flash portion.

Nothing like proprietary software rights to take the fun out of things.

Apparently the site "offers fans the chance to create and star in their very own Doctor Who comic using scenes, characters and devices from the show itself. There is a writer’s room which features a step-by-step video guide to making the comic with Executive Producer Russell T. Davies. In coming weeks there will be a top ten gallery as well as the chance to search through previous entries." Here in the US we’ll just have to take Doctor Who Online‘s word for it.

Lulu throws awards open

fol-logo-9195921When I was in Friends of Lulu, one of the main incentives to keep up membership was the opportunity to vote in the annual Lulu Awards, given to women of distinction whose contributions to comics kept getting ignored year after year by the major comics awards.

Now an era appears to have come to an end, as the organization has decided, for the first time ever, to open the award nominations and voting to non-members.

Details can be found on Adalisa Zarate’s blog.  The nomination form is here, and the deadline for nominations is May 7.  Here’s your chance to help recognize all the women who are still getting passed over by the boys’ club mentality of so many other awards processes, as well as celebrate those who are finally being noticed elsewhere.

Spider-Man Week in New York City

Oh boy oh boy oh boy! It’s here at last! Some people love Christmas in New York, some live for the July 4th fireworks, some like the Thanksgiving Day Parade, some people even love to freeze their butts off in Times Square on New Year’s Eve – but nothing in the world compares to Spider-Man Week! Nothing in the whole wide wo–

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–thank God, I was able to rip that brain-sucking parasite off my body.

Anyway, here’s the list of events. Some fun stuff, including activities at the Bronx Zoo, the American Museum of Moving Images is showing episodes of the 60’s animated series, Peter David is signing copies of the novelization Thursday at Midtown Comics, all leading up to Free Comic Book Day– oh, and the US premiere of Spider-Man 3 in Peter Parker’s home borough, Queens. We’ll be covering some of the more interesting activities here.

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Marvel’s new Classics line

mohicans1-7552280So I’m catching up on Previews magazine (more about which in my Wednesday column) and I notice this drop-dead gorgeous art in the Marvel Previews insert that caught my eye and made me stare at the page for like a minute and a half.  And I’m one of those “usually more into the words than the art” comics people.

It was either an interior page or Jo Chen’s cover art for Last of the Mohicans #1, adapted from the James Fennimore Cooper novel by veteran scribe Roy Thomas.  Okay, probably the cover, but the interior pages in that Marvel Previews issue were equally gorgeous, with rich, lush inks.  I wish I knew who did those inks.  The pencillers are listed as Steve Kurth and Denis Medri, and their scene-setting and composition is indeed wonderful from what I’ve seen, but geez Marvel, whom do I have to bribe to get inkers’ names into your PR?

In any case, particularly having just come from the Kids’ Comic Con, I find this news of Marvel doing Classics Illustrated-type stuff to be welcome indeed.  Last of the Mohicans is the second title in the nascent Marvel Illustrated line If you haven’t yet grabbed Jungle Book by Gil Kane, Jo Duffy and P. Craig Russell, get it now), to be followed by Treasure Island and the Man in the Iron Mask.  Hey, can a woman-written classic be far behind?  I know Frankenstein‘s been done to death, so to speak, but how about some Virginia Woolf or a Bronte or two?

Sunday go-to-reading day

Where has the week gone?  We’re still not recovered from the last few 9to5’s of our day job, so it’s a good thing we have Sunday to peruse all the regular ComicMix columns from this past week:

Okay, we confess, we actually read all of those already.  We even wrote one.  But listening time has been nonexistent, so today’s activity will definitely consist of getting up to speed with Mellifluous Mike Raub‘s last three podcasts:

Now that I’ve switched back to first-person singular and taken care of the review of and visuals from yesterday’s Kids’ Comic Con (see below), I’ll be awaiting the Pittsburgh news from the rest of the crew whilst I spend the rest of the day catching you up on all the items I haven’t had time to write for the past few days…

Hey, kids and comics!

It was a lovely day in the Bronx yesterday, perfect for the 5-minute jaunt southward to attend the first ever Kids’ Comic Con at the Bronx Community College.

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I thought this was a terrific venture for the first time around.  Lots of tables geared, as it should be, specifically for kids, who responded with wonder and enthusiasm.

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The convention was the brainchild of Alex Simmons, seen here giving the welcoming address.  Alex, who has over 30 years of experiencing working with children and the creative arts, is also terrific at introducing like-minded adults to one another; I was mostly there to take in the event for ComicMix rather than participate, but I still found myself acquainted with at  least a half dozen "new" folks thanks to Alex!

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Alex also serves as Educational Outreach Director for MoCCA, and it’s always great to see this organization at any local convention.  They’re one of the most visible faces of NY comics, and hold lots of must-attend events! (more…)

Religion in comics, the current version

Believe it or not, there’s other ways to use comics to reach the faithful than those little Jack Chick pamplets prostelytizers hand to you.

joemax-6929544In the more traditional way, we have The Guardian Line, a line of comics put out by traditional comics pros like Michael Davis, Mike Baron, and Lovern Kindzierski. They have three titles so far with a fourth on the way, all intended for a young urban audience who are more comfortable with traditional action/adventure stories.

Then we have The Manga Bible, brought to us by British religious publisher Hodder & Stoughton. This is a manga adaptation of the TNIV Bible, itself an updated and current language version of the Bible. The Manga Bible only adapts the New Testament, but the Old Testament should be done by the end of the year.

Although I really do wonder where all the cherry blossoms come from when Jesus is dying…

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And finally, we go from traditional comics to manga to webcomics. Called Today is an online web presence from the National Office for Vocation which uses webcomics to help illustrate the myriad ways that people can follow a religious calling today.

Of course, we all know that Superman’s just one great big Christ metaphor, right?

Hat tip to Wired for the Manga Bible info.

The Big ComicMix Broadcast From Pittsburgh

sundae-4193947We’re here at the Pittsburgh Comiccon – sorry we’re a bit late, but we’ve been doing all sorts of  interviews and we’ve got some amazing stuff we’ll be telling you about today and in Big ComicMix Broadcasts to come.  As always, we’ve got the latest comics and media news and an interview with legendary Flash and Batman artist Carmine Infantino.  We’ll tell you about a bunch of television season finales, what exclusive Voltron product will be exclusive to comics shops, and ComicMix.com editor-in-chief Mike Gold lays some top secret info on the masses.

You’ll get all this (yes, and more!) by pressing this button:

 

 

MARTHA THOMASES: Child is father to the man

There is hardly anything more annoying than listening to a bunch of us Baby Boomers talking about the good old days: the music, the sex, the drugs, the sit-ins and be-ins and love-ins, even the comics. We act like we invented rebellion, and we don’t think anyone else will ever care about the world as much as we did, and certainly no one else will make changes as important as the ones we made.

We’re wrong.

A recent article in USA Today describes “Generation Y”, those born since the early 1980s, as one that has endured a lifetime of public tragedies. My generation lived through the Kennedy assassinations and the murder of Martin Luther King, the Kent State shootings, the Viet Nam War and Watergate, and these things were horrible. However, kids today witnessed the Challenger and Columbia space shuttle explosion, the Waco standoff, the Oklahoma City bombing, the attack on the Atlanta Olympics, school attacks on Columbine, the Amish school in Pennsylvania, and the recent Virginia Tech massacre. They’ve seen a tsunami devastate Southeast Asia, and Hurricane Katrina destroy New Orleans. In my day, we watched a half-hour evening news broadcast, while today there is a 24-hour news cycle. They say that Viet Nam was the first war fought on our living room television, but the “Shock and Awe” attacks on Baghdad four years ago had so much advance hype and so many on-the-scene embedded journalists, they practically had official sponsors.

The horrific moments that changed my personal world occurred when my best friend’s brother died in Viet Nam, followed shortly by the Kent State slaughter which was just a few miles from my house. Before that, my feelings, although sincere, were based more on ideas than on events. My son saw the World Trade Center collapse outside his classroom in lower Manhattan, but not before he saw burning bodies falling from the windows.

Just as the Sixties didn’t turn everyone into a protesting hippie peacenik, these events have not shaped a single personality type among today’s twenty-somethings. Most of the mass media would have us believe that the values of this generation establish a new low of shallowness, exalting the likes of Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan. But their taste and values go far beyond American Idol or the Pussycat Dolls.

The USA Today article quotes social historian William Strauss: “the Millennials’ baby-boomer parents were anxious about political assassinations because that’s what they witnessed growing up. But their children’s fears are different – because they witnessed mass killings of children by peers whose motives nobody can seem to understand.”

He continues, “The fact that this sort of thing can happen calls into question the super-achieving, high-stress life some of them lead.” He says that Generation Y will be less concerned with “having it all” than with having a balance. Unlike many in my generation, who traded in their values for SUVs, private schools and second houses and the long commute to jobs that paid for everything, there is hope that this generation will enjoy every day with their families as well as meaningful work. (more…)

Todd Goldman sending cease-and-desist letters

Boy oh boy. We’re a little late to the party, here’s the quick recap: Todd Goldman is the founder of “David and Goliath,” a merchandise company which produces clothing, posters and other merchandise featuring a variety of artwork and slogans that he theoretically created all by himself. According to the Wall Street Journal, the sales volume of “David and Goliath” was US$ 90 million in 2004. Earlier this month, Goldman was accused of plagiarism by webcartoonist Dave “Shmorky” Kelly, in a post on the Something Awful forums, claiming that Goldman’s piece “Dear God Make Everyone Die” was taken directly from a 2001 comic by Kelly.

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Since Kelly’s initial accusation, other bloggers and webcartoonists have found numerous other cases of alleged creative tracing. In the meantime, Goldman (or someone claiming to be him) has accused Kelly of pedophilia, posted pornographic images to defame Kelly which ended up being seen by minors, hijacked the MySpace account of the person who originally reported the theft, openly mocked anyone who expressed concern about this… and has enlisted his lawyer to threaten anyone who reports on any of the above, even when such reportage sticks to verifiable facts. As a result, Publisher’s Weekly has now taken down posts from Heidi MacDonald on the issue.

Dirk Deppey, Gary Tyrrell, and Tom Spurgeon have been all over this story, and now it’s gotten the attention of Boing Boing, Penny Arcade, and Slashdot.

Mr. Goldman, meet the Internet – filled with lots of people from all over the planet who do their research and hate bullies and like crusades.